VENEZUELA
WHEREAS
the Venezuelan government has stepped up its systematic violations of standards
of democracy and tolerance in the hemisphere, as set forth the Inter-American
Democratic Charter, and is constantly implementing coercive and threatening
measures against the private news media and journalists
WHEREAS
the Constitutional Division of the Venezuelan Supreme Court issued Ruling
1942 upholding the principles of its earlier Ruling 1013, which was presented
and denounced before the Inter American Press Association and the Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights, and which establishes restrictive judicial regulations
for news content in addition to establishing the legal responsibility of publishers
and editors of news media outlets for this content, and this ruling seriously
compromises the exercise of the freedom of speech and freedom of the press
WHEREAS
discussion continues in the National Assembly, at the government’s initiative,
on a bill called the Social Responsibility in Radio and Television Act, known
as the Content Law, which blatantly subjects the entire radio and television
system to government control and sets forth government policy for creating
news content
WHEREAS
still pending before the Venezuelan National Assembly is a bill with the same
restrictive purposes, known as the Citizen Participation Law, which sets up
a People’s Watch Council to monitor the print media, and this council
which would be authorized to penalize those who, according to its judgment,
do not report in a “true and impartial” manner
WHEREAS
the Venezuelan government has not enforced the various temporary preventive
measures issued by the Inter-American Court designed to protect the right
to personal safety, as well as the right to freedom of speech and freedom
of the press for publishers, editors and journalists in the news media in
general; and the President himself stated publicly, in the presence of the
Secretary General of the OAS and government representatives at the Hemispheric
Summit on Poverty, that he would refuse to obey any measure handed down by
human rights organizations in the Americas, describing their members as “criminals”
WHEREAS
threats by the government and the president of Venezuela have continued, even
going so far as to mention possible permanent denial of frequencies to radio
stations because of disagreement with the news they broadcast
WHEREAS
Principle 1 of the Declaration of Chapultepec, cited in the OAS Declaration
of Principles on Freedom of Expression, declares, “No people or society
can be free without freedom of expression and of the press. The exercise of
this freedom is not something authorities grant, it is an inalienable right
of the people”; and Principle 5 declares, “Prior censorship, restrictions
on the circulation of the media or dissemination of their reports, forced
publication of information, the imposition of obstacles to the free flow of
news, and restrictions on the activities and movements of journalists directly
contradict freedom of the press”
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF
THE IAPA RESOLVES
to emphatically condemn the restrictions being imposed on freedom of expression
in Venezuela, through illegal methods or resources that are opposed to its
own Constitution, to international human rights treaties and the principles
of the Declaration of Chapultepec
to denounce these facts
to international, governmental and nongovernmental organizations that safeguard
and guarantee freedom of press and of expression
to request that the president
of the IAPA send missions to Venezuela to report on the observance of freedom
of expression and freedom of the press in relation to the recall referendum
provided under in the Venezuelan Constitution and under agreements promoted
by the Secretary General of the OAS, the United Nations and the Carter Center.